Friday, February 18, 2011

Vietnamese students get support in Melbourne

U.S. education career orientation seminar

Around 5,000 new international students, including Vietnamese students, will receive assistance when first arriving in Melbourne until February 26.

On landing at Tullamarine International Airport in the Australian city, overseas students can visit the welcome desk and receive an information kit.

“There are 30,000 international students either studying or living in Melbourne, and we want to support them as they embark on their Melbourne education and ensure they enjoy their time while they’re here,” Robert Doyle, Melbourne’s Lord Mayor said.

Vietnamese student, Bui Hoang Trung, who is doing a Bachelor of Computing at Swinburne University said, “Arriving in a new city as a new student can be tough… The welcome desk at the airport is designed to put new students and their parents at ease.”

The info kit was the brainchild of Swinburne University of Technology and the Victorian State government. About 100 volunteers, including Swinburne teachers and international students, help out with the program to assist international students to get to know their new city. Many of the volunteers are multilingual and there are pamphlets printed in different languages.

The Student Welcome Desk has been operating at the Australia-based airport since 2009 during the two major arrival periods of international students in February and July. This month, the desk will hand out 13,000 welcome kits.

According to Australian Education International (AEI), the international arm of the Australian Government Department of Education, over 24,000 Vietnamese students have studied in Australia so far.

*The U.S. Consulate General will hold the U.S. Education and Career Orientation Seminar  at Rex Hotel, 141 Nguyen Hue Boulevard, HCMC’s District 1 on Monday Feb. 28.

The orientation is designed to guide Vietnamese students through the decision making process of studying in the U.S. The event include informing students about job demand trends in Vietnam, equipping students with the tools to choose the right U.S. schools that meet their individual needs, empowering students to ask key questions when making this decision, assisting students with the application process, educating the public about accreditation and the concept of due diligence, and informing students about the student visa application process.

The free event is scheduled from 8 a.m. to 5p.m. and includes the sessions How to Use the Internet to Search for the Right School and Accreditation; Vietnam Workforce: Projected Career Trends in Vietnam; Application Process; Student Visa and SEVIS; and Student’s Life in the U.S.

Related Articles

VEF fellowship applications open

Vietnam Education Foundation (VEF) has announced that online application forms for the VEF Fellowship Program for funding to study in the U.S. are now available.

The deadline for students who haven’t yet got a place in a U.S. university is April 10. The deadline for students who have already secured a place at a university is March 10.

The VEF Fellowship Program is one of the key components of VEF’s mandate to enhance bilateral relations between the United States and Vietnam through international educational exchange programs that help improve Vietnamese Science and Technology (S&T) capacities.

VEF provides fellowships to the most talented Vietnamese for graduate study in the United States in S&T. Fellows are selected through a highly competitive, open and transparent process. VEF maintains high standards of excellence by choosing only top-notch students who demonstrate the ability to thrive in an U.S. academic setting.

 In order to produce young scientists and faculty for Vietnam, VEF prefers Ph.D. candidates. Working experience or government affiliation is not required.
VEF has placed 306 Fellows at 70 top universities in the United States.

VEF was established by the U.S. Congress under the Vietnam Education Foundation Act (2000) with the purpose of establishing educational exchange activities for Vietnamese nationals and also for Americans to teach at Vietnamese universities.

To access the forms go to www.vef.gov.

Related Articles

VEF fellowship applications open

Vietnam Education Foundation (VEF) has announced that online application forms for the VEF Fellowship Program for funding to study in the U.S. are now available.

The deadline for students who haven’t yet got a place in a U.S. university is April 10. The deadline for students who have already secured a place at a university is March 10.

The VEF Fellowship Program is one of the key components of VEF’s mandate to enhance bilateral relations between the United States and Vietnam through international educational exchange programs that help improve Vietnamese Science and Technology (S&T) capacities.

VEF provides fellowships to the most talented Vietnamese for graduate study in the United States in S&T. Fellows are selected through a highly competitive, open and transparent process. VEF maintains high standards of excellence by choosing only top-notch students who demonstrate the ability to thrive in an U.S. academic setting.

 In order to produce young scientists and faculty for Vietnam, VEF prefers Ph.D. candidates. Working experience or government affiliation is not required.
VEF has placed 306 Fellows at 70 top universities in the United States.

VEF was established by the U.S. Congress under the Vietnam Education Foundation Act (2000) with the purpose of establishing educational exchange activities for Vietnamese nationals and also for Americans to teach at Vietnamese universities.

To access the forms go to www.vef.gov.

Related Articles

New book traces last decade of Vietnam’s development

A new book called Vietnam tu nam 2011 – Vuot lens u nghiet nga cua thoi gian is a compilation of articles by Tran Van Tho
The Saigon Times Foundation has released a new book that tracks the country’s development since the late 1990s through newspaper and magazine articles by Prof. Tran Van Tho from Waseda University, Japan.

Tri Thuc Publishing House published the book Vietnam tu nam 2011 – Vuot len su nghiet nga cua thoi gian (Vietnam from 2011 – overcoming the cruelty of time) which contains nearly 50 of the professor’s articles in Vietnamese that have been published, mostly in Thoi bao Kinh te Sai Gon published by Saigon Times Group.

The compiled articles express the writer’s hopes over the past decade that Vietnam would regain the time it had lost and catch up with the developed world.

Tran Van Tho, a researcher on Vietnam’s economy, education, culture and society, theorizes about national policy and discusses the hot issues here and globally. Articles include: From the Quang Trung spring to the twentieth century; Establishment Nguyen Trai spirit in Viet-Trung economic tie, Express railway: Vietnam on Thursday and Japan 50 years ago.

The printing costs were sponsored by Trung Nguyen Coffee Company. It has 362 pages and costs VND89,000. All proceeds from book sales will be used by the Saigon Times Foundation to grant scholarships for students in Hoi An City, Quang Nam Province, where the writer went to highschool.

To buy it, contact the reader relations department of Saigon Times Group at 3821 0019, email: phathanh@thesaigontimes.vn or Miss Hoang Tuyen of the Saigon Times Foundation at 3740 2712.

Related Articles

A decade since Trinh Cong Son’s death

A painting by the late Trinh Cong Son whose songs are known and loved throughout Vietnam Photo: Provided by the artist’s family
Events will be held around the country to mark the 10th death anniversary of famous Vietnamese songwriter, Trinh Cong Son, for a month from March 5 to April 4.

The program will start with two music nights directed by Pham Hoang Nam at the HCMC Opera House on March 18 and Hanoi Opera House on March 24.

A free touring live show by the Quang Dung singers will be start at Vietnam National University, Hanoi on March 27, before going to Nghinh Luong pavilion on March 3 and Vietnam National University HCMC on April 4. A music night called Hue-Saigon-Hanoi will follow at the Hoi Ngo club-house at Binh Quoi Tourist Area in HCMC’s Binh Thanh District. The event is being organized by his younger sister, singer Trinh Vinh Trinh, MC Do Trung Quan and Cao Lap.

On April 10, paintings made by the late song writer will be displayed at the White Palace in HCMC. The same day, Trinh Vinh Trinh will debut a website about Trinh Cong Son made by his family.

There will also be a painting exhibition featuring more than 30 paintings at HCMC Fine Art Museum in District 1. The show will tour to the Morin Hotel in Hue City.

During the 1960s and 1970s, Trinh Cong Son wrote over 600 songs. His songs have been translated into English, Japanese and French.

He died April 1, 2001.

Related Articles

Language of love: Vietnamese or Chinese or Universal?

Several cases of audacious public display of affection in China recently have caused quite an uproar among the internet community.

From China

In August 2010, a video clip of a young couple making out at a public canteen in China spread all over the web like wildfire, sending a shock wave through its millions of netizens.

Not long after that, news of a rich Chinese youth confessing his love with a giant heart made from 1999 roses became a much-discussed topic both on internet chat rooms and in the print media.

In December last year, the internet community once again was fumed over the clip of a teenage couple displaying too much affection on a public bus, prompting the driver to stop and force them off the bus.

And most recently, after a 1:20 minute long video clip that captures two young students, allegedly from Fujian Province, kissing each other passionately in their class made its way onto youtube, it has brought about much public outrage. Soon angry words began to fly thick and fast among those who criticized their “indecency” and those who rallied behind them.

 love 1

The flaming love confession of a young Chinese couple

…To Vietnam

The young Vietnamese have proved to be no less bold in their public display of affection, with several video clips of teenagers kissing in class widely circulated on the internet.

In the early morning of April 10, 2010, students at the Academy of Journalism and Communication’s dormitory became witnesses, reluctant or not, to a highly romantic love confession of student to his girlfriend -- this, not long after a traffic-stopping demonstrative act of love by another student at Dich Vong Hau park in Hanoi, with 1,000 candles and 100 roses on March 19.

Another case, a student from Phan Huy Chu high school in Hanoi confessed his love by making a heart from rose petals in the middle of the schoolyard.

The love confession with 150 roses at Hanoi’s Noi Bai Airport last year by a young man from Vinh Phuc (who was, despite the heroic effort, turned down) draws some parallels to the one by a wealthy young man in Wang Fu Jing shopping complex in Beijing two years before (who also suffered from the same unhappy ending).

The most recent public display of affection scandal is a video clip posted on the internet last week showing a young couple--the girl still wearing her school uniform--petting and necking in a class on Nguyen Chi Thanh Street, Hanoi.

 love 3

 love 2

Couples in Hanoi express their love at public places, also with flowers and candles

For or against?

According to Nguyen Thi Chinh, a consultant at Psychology Consulting Center in Hanoi, it is a normal psychological trait among teenagers to mimic what they think will assert themselves as adults or simply make them different from others.

Dr. Trinh Hoa Binh from the Institute of Sociology considers this phenomenon as deviation from the norm. “Of course, as a rule, what is inappropriate and temporary will eventually be discarded. Young people nowadays have access to a large amount of information, yet they can be quite vulnerable when faced with these overwhelming, vehement waves of information,” he said.

Others, however, express their understanding and support for this social phenomenon.

Pham Thinh, an Education and Youth columnist for VTC News online newspaper, thinks that those who exhibit such behaviors are often people possessing strong character, with a zealous passion for life. “Those young people are likely to do great things in the future. I’ll give them my support, if what they do is not out of bounds with their family circumstances,” he said.

Dr. Do Thi Thu Hang, lecturer at the Academy of Journalism and Communication, thinks teenagers mimic these impudent expressions of love because they appeal to them and speak to their needs. She also says that if similar things are to happen in other countries, not necessarily China, Vietnamese youngsters will also “import” those things immediately.

Is the media to blame?

A question was raised over whether this is the result of how the media have been exploiting sensational news to attract more viewers. Dr. Do Thi Thu Hang said that might not be the case, because although the media can lower the bar a bit at times, it does not seem to have caused much harm.

Pham Thinh, however, seems to disagree, believing that the media do play some role in this. “This type of news attracts a lot of viewers, most of whom are young people, all newspaper editors know this, so in publishing such information, they partly aim to draw more attraction,” he said.

However, online newspapers cannot be the only source of such attention-grabbing, crowd-exciting news, which is also widely spread through social networks and various information sharing websites. Thus, the journalist continues to analyze further, “While the newspapers only do their job, which is to report such events to the readers, in many cases their reports somehow cross the line.”

For this reason, according to Hang, we need to filter the news provided to the public carefully to prevent the mimicking of behaviors that go against our traditions and culture, and at the same time encourage gracious romantic and other love-related behaviors.

Pham Thinh expressed a similar view, though more firmly, “Newspapers’ managers and editors should consider carefully before publishing these shocking contents because young people, still in an impressionable psychological state and in the process of developing an identity, will be quick to mimic. And an additional undesirable effect is that the older generations will also lose their trust in the young.”

Related Articles

Charm seekers faint at chaotic Tran Temple fest

A not so charming scene occurred yesterday evening at the Tran Temple Festival held in the northern province of Nam Dinh when dozens fainted after jostling and elbowing one another to lay their hands on a lucky talisman being sold there.

Traditionally thought to bring good luck, the yellow charms are officially priced at VND20,000 (US$1) each but since many could not reach the sale points, the amulets were sold 10 times more expensive by scalpers.

Charms were in so high a demand that the festival’s management board sent more employees to sell them but still could not meet pilgrims’ needs.

Although the festival officially opened at 11:00 pm yesterday, nearby roads were flooded much earlier.

From 20:00 pm, police set up barriers to prevent tourists from elbowing one another to reach the amulets but this proved fruitless.

Some extremists shouted and climbed over the barriers.

The packed, frenzied atmosphere caused dozens to faint, mostly elderly people and women.

d

d

d

The Tran Temple Festival is held annually on the death anniversary of General Tran Hung Dao, falling on 15th day of the first lunar month.

It takes place at the historical site of the Tran Dynasty at the outskirts of Nam Dinh.

The festival features solemn rituals, such as palanquin procession, and traditional cultural activities.

Related Articles